-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://motherjones.com/arms/
<A HREF="http://motherjones.com/arms/">The MoJo Wire--Action Atlas, U.S. Arms
Sales
</A>
-----
Arms Around the World

It was the early 1990s and then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton was
on the campaign trail making promises: "I expect to review our arms
sales policy and to take it up with the other major arms sellers of the
world as a part of a long-term effort to reduce the proliferation of
weapons."

Ah, campaign promises. But the economy was in the doldrums, and the
prospect of cutting arms sales -- sugar daddy to one of the nation's
largest industries -- didn't thrill either labor or corporate America.
What's more, the Gulf War had just ended the previous year, and it was
the best extended commercial an arms salesman could ask for. (Indeed,
some arms manufacturers incorporated bombing videos into their
promotional materials.) Countries were clamoring for the high-tech
weapons that made for such good TV.

So, once elected, Bill Clinton did what he does best: He took advantage
of the opportunity. Rather than insert human-rights concerns into the
arms-sales equation, as did his Democratic predecessor President Carter,
Clinton decided to aggressively continue the sales policies of President
Bush, himself no slouch when it came to selling U.S. arms.



Early on, Clinton required our diplomats to shill for arms merchants to
their host countries. The results were immediate: During Clinton's first
year in office, U.S. arms sales more than doubled. From 1993 to 1997,
the U.S. government sold, approved, or gave away $190 billion in weapons
to virtually every nation on earth.

The arms industry, meanwhile, has greased the wheels. It filled the
Democratic Party coffers to the tune of nearly $2 million in the 1998
election cycle.

To examine the Clinton administration's eagerness to arm the world, the
MoJo Wire has compiled a detailed look at America's top weapons
customers during the Clinton years, tallying their total 1993-97
purchases through both the Pentagon (so-called "Foreign Military Sales,"
or FMS) and U.S. manufacturers ("Direct Commercial Sales," or DCS).

What we found is that while the U.S. obviously sells weapons to NATO
countries and relatively democratic allies like Japan and South Korea,
it also has a nasty habit of arming both sides in a conflict, as well as
countries with blighted democracy or human-rights records, like
Indonesia, Colombia, and Saudi Arabia.

All of this might be justified as a way to maintain a strong
manufacturing job-base in the U.S., but some of these sales actually
result in jobs being shipped abroad -- while arms manufacturers get tax
breaks for merging, resulting in further layoffs here at home.

We examined the top dozen of these arms-exporting corporations, showing
which does business where and how each has taken advantage of myriad
federal tax breaks, reimbursements, and golden parachutes -- as well as
the eagerness of Congress to keep one of the economy's largest employing
segments happy.

In a separate story, we detail the arms industry's lobbying strategies
 in Washington: how it keeps the export pipeline wide open, and easily
outmaneuvers Congress' occasional attempt to tie arms sales to
human-rights records.

Lastly, we list organizations that you can join or support to help
influence U.S. and corporate policies toward arms sales around the
world.




U.S. market share of worldwide arms sales

Source


Below is a sample of some of our most interesting findings:

Shipping Jobs Overseas
According to the Pentagon, the defense industry laid off 795,000
American workers between 1992 and 1997. At the same time, many of these
corporations were sweetening their arms deals to other countries by
offering "offsets" -- incentives provided to foreign countries in
exchange for the purchase of military goods and services. The programs
often include agreements to manufacture some or all of the products in
the purchasing country.

Turkey, for example, agreed to buy 160 F-16s from General Dynamics in
1987 (for delivery through 1994) for an estimated $4 billion -- on the
condition that most of the planes be built in Turkey. The offset
resulted in 1,500 jobs going to Turkey. In 1992, General Dynamics
 entered into a similar F-16 offset deal with South Korea and brought
400 Koreans to its Fort Worth, Texas, plant for training, after having
laid off 10,000 workers in the previous two years.

Lockheed Martin has continued the trend since it bought General
Dynamics' F-16 program in 1993: In vying for a contract to supply
fighters to Poland, it is offering to build an assembly plant there for
all future F-16 sales to Central Europe -- so the planes won't be made
 in the U.S. at all. Makes you feel patriotic, doesn't it?

Corporate Pork
Under a Defense Department policy initiated in 1993, U.S. taxpayers wind
up covering a big chunk of the cost of defense-corporation mergers. The
tally so far has reached $856.2 million in perfectly legal write-offs,
including $405 million for the Lockheed/Martin Marietta merger, to name
one example. Because of the policy, Lockheed was able to bill the
Pentagon up front for $2.4 million of CEO Norman Augustine's salary.

In 1996, Congress created the Defense Export Loan Guarantee program to
finance U.S. weapons sales to foreign countries. Its first beneficiary?
A United Industrial sale of pilotless aircraft and training systems to
cash-strapped Romania. If Romania defaults on its payments (not a bad
bet for a country in economic turmoil), U.S. taxpayers will be left
holding the bag: $16.7 million. But United Industrial gets paid either
way.

Arming Both Sides
The Clinton administration has not been shy about arming potential foes
in regional conflicts. For example, two of America's biggest arms
customers are Greece and Turkey, which have been threatening to go to
war with each other for decades over the tiny Mediterranean island of
Cyprus.

Both countries stake a claim to the island, more than a third of which
has been occupied by Turkish forces since 1974, and the two have clashed
hundreds of times in the 25 years since.

Though barred by Congress from selling offensive weapons to Cyprus
itself, in 1997 the U.S. sold (or allowed American corporations to sell)
more than $270 million worth of weapons to Greece and nearly $750
million worth to Turkey. Now if there's a war, the two NATO allies can
blast away at one another with far greater efficiency, thanks to the
U.S. defense industry and its cheerleader, Bill Clinton.

Acknowledgments and Sources


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